This is Mr. Funky Teacher with BeAFunkyTeacher.com. I’m coming to you with another Be a Funky Teacher podcast. Welcome back, everyone. Today’s episode is called After the Testimony: What I Learned From Speaking Truth at the Capitol. I’m recording from a quiet corner of the Nebraska State Capitol. The hearing room has emptied out, the echoes have faded, and I can finally exhale. What a day. My superintendent was here offering support, and it meant a lot to have him there. He even took me out for lunch, which gave me a moment to step away and process everything. I came back to the Capitol because I wanted to record this episode in the same building where I testified. It was a powerful experience. Before we get into it, I want to share three things I’m thankful for. The first thing I’m thankful for is a positive and receptive experience. The senators didn’t just listen, they leaned in. Their questions were thoughtful, their tone was respectful, and it reminded me that advocacy works best when it becomes a conversation, not a confrontation. The second thing I’m thankful for is a supportive district. Superintendent Turner and my district leadership were incredibly supportive of me being here. Leadership that trusts teacher voice turns individual courage into collective strength. The third thing I’m thankful for is the privilege to advocate. In a democracy, anyone can speak, but not everyone does. Teachers must, because when those living the story stay silent, others rewrite it for us. Let’s get into the main topic, what I learned from speaking truth at the Capitol. The energy in the hearing room was something I won’t forget. Teachers, principals, superintendents, and advocates filled the space, each holding a piece of the same truth. The air felt heavy and hopeful at the same time. Everyone knew this issue mattered. I also ran into Renee Jones, the 2023 Nebraska Teacher of the Year. I had met her earlier this year at the National Teacher Leadership Conference, and seeing her testify right after me was powerful. She echoed many of the same themes around respect, retention, and restoring teacher identity. It felt like a relay of passion, one voice passing the baton to the next. In my testimony, I shared that burnout is not just exhaustion, it is identity erosion. You cannot ask teachers to protect and care for children while simultaneously distrusting them to teach. When teacher identity erodes, retention collapses. Restoring teacher purpose is how we keep educators in Nebraska classrooms. As I spoke, there was a stillness in the room. Heads lifted. Hands paused. It wasn’t volume that carried the message, it was resonance. These words came from lived experience, not a textbook. One senator asked me why teachers are blamed so often. My answer came from the gut. Teachers are the most visible part of the system, so they become the easiest target. Blaming teachers is simpler than fixing structures. But when you blame the people who care the most, you weaken the foundation holding students up. We must move from blame to belonging. The teacher pipeline crisis is deeply connected to identity erosion. Every teacher who leaves represents a story interrupted. Burnout and attrition are surface symptoms. The deeper issue is loss of trust, autonomy, and humanity. The pipeline doesn’t dry up from lack of talent. It dries up from lack of trust. I’m grateful to Senator Juarez for bringing this issue forward and to the senators who asked honest questions. Seeing administrators testify alongside teachers reminded me that progress happens when leadership aligns across roles. Advocacy is contagious. When teachers see it’s possible, they find their own voices. Teachers are not the problem. They are the pulse. When we restore teacher identity, we restore student opportunity. As I sit here in the Capitol, footsteps echo softly down the halls. Advocacy doesn’t end when the microphone turns off. It continues in classrooms, conversations, and communities. Today wasn’t about applause. It was about alignment. I’m grateful, hopeful, and more convinced than ever that when educators keep showing up with authenticity, our classrooms will keep finding their rhythm. If you found value in this episode, jump on over to Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen and leave a five-star review. Remember to inspire greatness in young people. And don’t forget to be a funky teacher. Bye now.